Pfuel

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Pfuel
Family Coat of Arms
Pfuehl-Wappen.jpg
Websitejahnsfelder-chronik.de
schloss-tuessling.de
Jahnsfelde manor-house
Tüßling castle, Bavaria, photographed, as inhabited by the Counts Bruges-von Pfuel today

The German ancient noble family of Pfuel (also Pfuhl or Phull) arrived in Brandenburg in the year 926 and later widened their influence to Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Mecklenburg, Pomerania, Württemberg, Westphalia, Eastern Europe and Sweden.

Its members today bear the name "Grafen Bruges-von Pfuel".

Family line[]

Ancestors' list for direct paternal main line:[1]

  • Henricus de Puele, c. 1215
  • Heino de Puele (1282–1307)
  • Heino von Pule (1306–1349)
  • Strassen von Pfuel (died 1375)
  • Otto von Pfuel (1375–1420)
  • Bertram von Pfuel (born. c. 1405–1410, died 1482), 1440 to 1477 documented
  • Friedrich von Pfuel (1460–1527)
  • Bertram von Pfuel (born 1510/1515, died 1574), 1531 to 1574 documented
  • Friedrich von Pfuel (1545–1594), 1577 to 1587 documented
  • Bertram von Pfuel (1577–1639), 1597 to 1638 documented
  • Friedrich Heino von Pfuel (1620–1661)
  • Christian Friedrich von Pfuel (1653–1702 near Kaiserswerth), Killed in action
  • Hempo Ludwig von Pfuel (1690–1770 in Gielsdorf)
  • Ludwig von Pfuel (1718 in Gielsdorf – 1789 in Berlin)
  • Friedrich von Pfuel (1781 in Jahnsfelde – 1846 in Karlsbad)
  • Alexander von Pfuel (1825 in Berlin – 1898 in Jahnsfelde)
  • Heino von Pfuel (1871 in Jahnsfelde – 1916 in Berlin), DOW)[2]
  • Curt Christoph Graf Bruges-von Pfuel (1907 in Berlin – 2000 in Bonn)
  • Christian Friedrich Graf Bruges-von Pfuel (born 1942 in Jahnsfelde)
  • Frederic Alexander Graf Bruges-von Pfuel (born 1978 in Munich)

Estates[]

Brandenburg[]

  • 1367 Falkenberg
  • 1375 Werftpfuhl, Altranft
  • pre-1413 Frankenfelde, Bliesdorf, Reichenow, Möglin, Wollenberg, Schönfeld, Reichenberg, Biesow
  • 1445 Wriezen
  • 1449 Jahnsfelde
  • 1450 Gielsdorf, Grünthal, Leuenberg, Schulzendorf
  • 1472 Trebnitz
  • 1480 Quilitz (Neuhardenberg)
  • pre-1500 Tempelfelde, Torgelow, Tiefensee, Steinbeck, Quappendorf, Ruhlsdorf, Garzau, Garzin
  • 1529 Friedersdorf
  • 1536 Wilkendorf
  • pre-1663 Buckow, Hohenfinow, Prötzel, Hasenholz, Dahmsdorf, Obersdorf, Kienitz, Münchehofe

Berlin[]

  • Strausberg
  • 1472 Biesdorf
  • 1609 Marzahn
  • 1655 Dahlem

Saxony-Anhalt[]

  • 1641 Helfta
  • 1654 Polleben
  • 1664 Eisleben, Wimmelburg
  • 1668 Seeben, Muldenstein
  • 1680 Nedlitz

Baden-Württemberg[]

  • 1787 Obermönsheim

Pomerania[]

  • 1827 Schwerin
  • 1838 Elmershagen

Bavaria[]

  • 1991 Tüßling
  • 1991 Gut Mamhofen (Starnberg)

Members[]

Notable members of the family include:

  • Adam von Pfuel (1604–1659), Swedish General, later Privy Councillor and General-War commissar in Danish service; son of Adam I. (1562–1626)
  • Adam Dietrich von Pfuhl, electoral Colonel, Domherr to the Prince-elector of Brandenburg (until 1671), member of the Fruitbearing Society.
  • Adam Friedrich von Pfuhl (1643–c. 1707), electoral Colonel, owner of the Salt evaporation pond in Kötzschau.
  • Adam Heinrich Christoph, electoral Colonel, as well as service at the court of the Duke of Saxe-Gotha; hereditary lord of Polleben and Stedern.
  • Alexander Friedrich von Pfuel (1825–1898), royal Prussian Ritterschaftsrat, Knight of Justice of the Order of Saint John, Lord of Jahnsfelde; married to Anna (1835–1918), daughter of Carl Graf von Brühl, the Superintendent general of the Prussian royal theatres; son of Lieutenant General Friedrich Heinrich Ludwig von Pfuel, as well as father of dragoon officer Heino Friedrich (1871–1916), Lord of Jahnsfelde, DOW in World War I (1916).
  • Anna-Elisabeth von Pfuel (1909–2005), aunt of Prince Claus of the Netherlands, great-aunt of King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands; wife of Julius Freiherr von dem Bussche-Haddenhausen (1906–1977), who was the brother of Baroness Gösta von dem Bussche-Haddenhausen (1902–1996); sister of Curt-Christoph von Pfuel.
  • Anna Katharine von Pfuel († 1657), daughter of Adam I. (1562–1626); mother of Georg Friedrich von Creytzen; great-grandmother of Countess Katharina Dorothea Finck of Finckenstein (1700–1728), progenitrix of several European imperial and royal families; great-great-grandmother of Friedrich Wilhelm, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, father of King Christian IX of Denmark.
  • Anna Maria von Phul (1786–1823), American artist
  • Arndt Friedrich von Pfuel (1603–1673), Prussian lieutenant colonel; Lord of Schulzendorf, Schmöckwitz and Jahnsfelde.
  • August Karl von Pfuhl (1794–1874), royal Prussian major general; father of Lieutenant General Emil von Pfuhl
  • August von Phull (* 1769), royal Wurttembergian Chamberlain, Premier Captain of the Palace Guard (Ober-Schloßhauptmann); son of General of the Artillery (Generalfeldzeugmeister) Friedrich August Heinrich Leberecht von Pfuhl (1735–1818)
  • August Christoph Adolf von Pfuhl (* 1768), royal treasurer, later senior forestry official (Oberforstmeister) near Trier; son of General Ernst Ludwig von Pfuhl (1716–1798)
Children of the Pfuel family, mid 17th century
Ignatia Franziska von Pfuhl with her husband Klemens Karl von Freyberg; detail of a fresco by Joseph Keller, church of St. Moritz (Zell), Eisenberg, Bavaria
The Steamer Henry Von Phul (1860)

Literature[]

  • Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelslexikon Band X, pp. 336f., Band 119, C. A. Starke, Limburg (Lahn) 1999, ISBN 3-7980-0819-1
  • Bernhard von Gersdorff: Preußische Köpfe – Ernst von Pfuel. Stappverlag, 1981, ISBN 3-87776-154-2
  • Stephanie von Pfuel: Wenn schon, denn schon. LangenMüller, 2007, ISBN 978-3-7844-3115-4
  • Marco Schulz: Jahnsfelde Schlösser und Gärten der Mark. Freundeskreis Schlösser und Gärten der Mark, Sibylle Badstübner-Gröger (Publisher). ISBN 978-3-941675-00-1

References[]

External links[]

Media related to Pfuel family at Wikimedia Commons

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